AOR Dissemination and Publications

CONFERENCE PAPERS, PANELS, ROUNDTABLES, & INVITED LECTURES

2018

Conference Panels, “Archaeologies of Reading: How Gabriel Harvey and John Dee Read Their Libraries.” Papers include: Earle Havens, “Guide Lines in the Labyrinth”: How Gabriel Harvey Read His Library;” Matthew Symonds, “Archaeologies of Distant Reading: Data Analysis as Methodology in the Study of Gabriel Harvey’s Marginalia;” and Jaap Geraerts, “Patters of Reading: The Similarities and Idiosyncrasies of John Dee’s and Gabriel Harvey’s Reading Strategies;” Renaissance Society of America annual meeting, New Orleans, March 2018

Earle Havens, “Note to Self: How Gabriel Harvey Cross-Referenced His Library,” History of the Book Seminar, Harvard University, January 2018

2017

Anthony Grafton, “Learned Reading in the English Colonies: How Humanist Practices Crossed the Atlantic,” Conference on “Globalizing the Protestant Reformations,” Huntington Library, San Marino, CA, December 2017

Earle Havens, “The Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe, or, How Gabriel Harvey Read His Library,” Grolier Club of New York, April 2017

2016

John Abrahams, Sayeed Choudhury, and Mark Patton, “The Archaeology of Reading: An Implementation of the IIIF Protocol” demonstration, International Digital Curation Conference, Amsterdam, February 2016

Jaap Geraerts, Anthony Grafton, Earle Havens, and Matthew Symonds, Marginalia in the Early Modern World symposium, Princeton University, February 2016

Christopher Geekie and Earle Havens, “Reading Antiquity: Livy, Gabriel Harvey, and the Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe,” Antiquities and Its Uses “Reception and Renewal Conference,” a collaboration between the Centre for the Study of the Renaissance, University of Warwick, and the Charles S. Singleton Center for the Study of Premodern Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, April 2016

Earle Havens, “Reading Gabriel Harvey Reading His Livy: Interpreting Marginalia in a Digital Research Environment” presentation, Antiquities and Its Uses collaboration between the Centre for the Study of the Renaissance, University of Warwick, and the Charles S. Singleton Center for the Study of Premodern Europe, Johns Hopkins University, University of Warwick, June 2016

Earle Havens, “Falling Down the Rabbit Hole: Reading Renaissance Marginalia in a Digital Research Environment” presentation, National University of Ireland, Galway, September 2016

Earle Havens and Matthew Symonds, “Epic Marginalia: Preserving Reading Practices in Early Modern Print Culture” presentation, hosted by Archbishop Marsh’s Library and the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, September 2016

Matthew Symonds, “‘Poco y Bueno’: Gabriel Harvey’s Language and other Skills” presentation, Teaching & Learning in Early Modern England conference, University of Cambridge, September 2016

Matthew Symonds, “Archaeologies of Reading: Early Modern Reading Strategies and the Digital Humanities,” Marginal Notes conference, Monash University and the State Library of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia, September 2016

Jaap Geraerts, Earle Havens, and Matthew Symonds, “Digital Roundtable: The Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe,” Sixteenth-Century Studies Conference, Vancouver, October 2015

Earle Havens, “Empires of the Book: Richard Eden, Gabriel Harvey, and the Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe” presentation, John Carter Brown Library, Brown University, Providence, November 2015

2014

Lisa Jardine† and Matthew Symonds, “Matching up the Margins: New Work on Gabriel Harvey’s Marginalia,” Renaissance Society of America conference, New York, March 2014

Jaap Geraerts, Earle Havens, and Matthew Symonds, “The Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe: A New Digital Humanities Initiative at Johns Hopkins University, Princeton University, and University College London,” Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Printing (SHARP) conference, Antwerp, September 2014

Matthew Symonds, “What Is the Archaeology of Reading?” presentation, University of Kent, October 2014

Earle Havens, “The Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe: A Digital Humanities Initiative” presentation, Cenacolo (Medieval and Early Modern Studies in Baltimore/Washington DC Area) conference, Baltimore, November 2014

Earle Havens, “Notes in Books, or, When is an Annotated Book an Annotated Book?,” presentation at “Early Annotated Books: An Exploratory Symposium,” UCLA Center for Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Studies and the William Andrews Clark Library, Los Angeles, December 2014

PUBLICATIONS

The Archaeology of Reading is more than an exercise in resource-building. We will make available here original scholarly research on the history of reading that springs from the work undertaken on this project.

Matthew Symonds & Jaap Geraerts, “XML and the Archaeology of Reading,” in Harriet Phillips and Claire Bryony Williams (eds.), A Handbook of Editing Early Modern Texts (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, forthcoming), in press